The death of Emperor Hirohito in 1989 ended Japan's Showa era (1926–1989) and provided the occasion for the Japanese to confront their past and the roots of their present success.
This ""stimulating and comprehensive"" (Kirkus Reviews) collection of original essays on twentieth-century Japan's history and culture provides a unique mix of American and Japanese perspectives on Showa. With an important, substantial Introduction by Carol Gluck, the volume explores the strengths of the Japanese economy, the issue of democracy and Japan's political culture, Japan's achievements in technology and the arts, and its relations with other Asian nations and the United States.
Carol Gluck is George Sansom Professor of History at Columbia University. Stephen R. Graubard is the editor of Daedalus and is professor of history at Brown University.
"Showa is a useful collaborative American-Japanese exercise. Joint ventures can work." -- Daily Mainichi
In this stimulating and comprehensive essay collection (originally published as the Summer 1990 issue of Daedalus, which Graubard edits), distinguished American and Japanese scholars debate the significance of the "Showa" era - the reign of Emperor Hirohito, from 1925 to 1989 - in Japanese history. Ironically, "Showa" means "enlightened peace" - a term, the authors (including nine Americans and seven Japanese) make clear, that could not be less appropriate for this period in which Japan fought a world war, suffered ignominious defeat and occupation for the first time in its history, and subsequently rose to become the world's preeminent economic power. Ushered in with a lengthy introduction by Gluck (History/Columbia), the 16 essays offer as their main themes the causes of the war, the reasons for postwar growth, and the paradoxes in Japanese-US relations. The authors who address the issue of war (e.g., Masataka Kosaka: International Politics/Kyoto Univ.) see the conflict primarily as a Japanese reaction to vast British, Soviet, and American empires around Japan, and partially as the product of domestic forces (the weak constitutional structure and politically impotent imperial system, which left a power vacuum filled by military leaders). Regarding postwar growth, authors (e.g., Herbert Passim: Sociology/Columbia) tend not to emphasize Japanese ingenuity but to stress the unique history of American involvement in the Japanese economy, as well as policies imposed by the postwar government to encourage production and discourage consumption. The American influence is a major theme here, and there is a consensus among the authors that the American-Japanese relationship will continue to be of major significance for the economic well-being of both countries. Primarily for its rare mix of American and Japanese perspectives, an important contribution to our understanding of both Japan and Japanese-American relations. (Kirkus Reviews)
Showa is a useful collaborative American-Japanese exercise. Joint ventures can work.
"Showa is a useful collaborative American-Japanese exercise. Joint ventures can work."